Earth Likely Had Water Prior to Moon-Forming Collision

“Because water is such a vital ingredient for life, we rightly see it as precious,” said Richard Greenwood of Open University, a distance learning and research university located in England. “Our research shows that water is also extremely resilient and can survive an event as catastrophic as two planets colliding.”

There has long been a debate over how — and when — Earth obtained the water that is ubiquitous on our world today. While water molecules were part of the cloud of gas and dust that coalesced into our solar system 4.6 billion years ago, Earth’s early history included scorching temperatures and little-to-no atmosphere, so it was thought that any water on the planet’s surface would likely have evaporated.

There is also the prevailing theory that the moon was formed from a cataclysmic collision between proto-Earth and a solid impactor about 100 million years after our solar system’s formation. This giant impact, some scientists have proposed, surely would have blasted Earth’s water away.

That led many scientists to suggest that water would have been introduced on Earth at a later time, when it was pummeled by comets and asteroids during the Late Heavy Bombardment period, 4.1 to 3.8 billion years ago. Several studies suggest that these objects could have readily supplied the amount of water that is present on Earth today.

One sticking point for the giant impact theory, however, is planets in our solar system have unique chemical makeups. Earth and our moon appear similar when it comes to versions of elements called isotopes — specifically different isotopes of oxygen. A previous study discovered, though, that some rocks from the Apollo missions contained slightly more oxygen-17 than oxygen-16 when compared to Earth rocks. That indicated that the moon might have been primarily formed from the impactor rather than the proto-Earth.

But the new study not only supports the giant impact theory of the moon’s formation, it says Earth’s water could have survived such an event. The study also clarifies differences and similarities between the Earth and the moon.

Greenwood and his colleagues compared the oxygen composition from both Earth rocks and lunar samples brought back by the Apollo astronauts. In analyzing the oxygen-isotope compositions in both sets of samples, they showed a very small 3 to 4 parts per million difference between the two. There was “no significant difference” between the lunar samples and Earth samples in the amount of olivine, a common mineral in Earth’s subsurface.

According to the authors, these findings are consistent with high-energy impact simulations that confirm an almost complete “mixing” of the proto-Earth and the impactor, as well as retention of a large amount of water on Earth, as much as 70-95 percent.

“On the basis of this assumption, our data indicates that post-giant impact additions to the Earth could have contributed between 5 and 30 percent of Earth’s water, depending on global water estimates,” the team wrote. “Consequently, our data indicate that the main fraction of Earth’s water was accreted before the giant impact and not later, as often proposed.”

Greenwood and his team say their findings could potentially have implications for exoplanet habitability. Studies of extrasolar planetary systems have shown that many distant systems likely experienced similar chaotic collisions early in their formation, too, which led to doubts about the amount of liquid water on some of these worlds.

“What’s even more fascinating is that, because this worked for the Earth and the moon, it must also work for planets beyond our solar system,” Greenwood said in a statement. “Exoplanets with water on their surfaces may be much more common than we previously thought. And where there’s water, there could also be life!”